Quirks with the Things 3 Sidebar

Today I wanted to take some time to talk about something that’s been on my mind for the last few months, and that’s Things 3’s sidebar.

I’ve raved on here in the past about how much I love the design philosophy of Things. The top part of the sidebar really does make sense in terms of guiding you to prioritize your work using the GTD methodology. I’ve come to realize the way it handles areas and projects could use some serious rethinking though.

For starters, if you adopt David Allen’s definition of a project where anything that takes more than two steps is a project you end up with an unwieldy sidebar of projects. I’ve tried breaking my areas down further, but then you just end up with a bunch of areas as well. While not as big of a deal on macOS, it certainly makes managing things on iOS cluttered and complicated.

Another perplexing choice is the progress pies. At first, I loved them, but now I’m just not sure what their purpose is. I’ve already mentioned my desire to have them be optional to allow for sub-areas, but there’s a bigger issue at play.

By not allowing for task dependencies, Things 3’s design encourages you to adopt a strict adherence of GTD where only next actions exist for projects and subsequent actions are stored elsewhere. If you do this, Anytime becomes a functional “Next Actions” list, but it also means your progress pies will be never accurate. A project will appear to be almost complete when in reality it could have 20 more actions, they’re just stored elsewhere.

I’m not really sure what could be done in terms of rethinking the sidebar, but for now, I’ve basically stopped using it. When it’s not completely hidden, my areas are almost always collapsed, and I work from the main area view. This has some limitations because you can’t drag a task into a project within that view – only via the sidebar. Why this is, I have no clue…

Progress pies have entirely lost their intended meaning in my workflow. Instead, what they’ve come to symbolize are stalled projects. If a progress pie is full, that doesn’t mean a project is complete but rather that it is missing a next action. Progress pies on my areas reflect how much I’m spending on them – the fuller the circle the more I’m accomplishing in those areas.

Now don’t get me wrong, I still love Things, and I’m using it every day with no plans to move anywhere else. It has just been a surprise to me that an app so focused on its design has ended up with some oddly thought out quirks.

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4 thoughts on “Quirks with the Things 3 Sidebar”

Thank you for making this post. I stumbled across it while searching for a way to disable the progress pies. One of the things I love about Things 3 is the design. Unfortunately the progress pies are always present, reminding me that long term projects cannot be “completed”. I also agree with your assessment of the “stalled project” feeling it portrays.

Hi Andrea,
So, are you saying, if you have a project to completely revamp your lawn, for example, you ONLY put the project and the next action into Things, and the rest of the actions are stored in, say the Notes app, and when you do your weekly review, you copy the next action text from the Notes app into Things?

I ask because, although GTD gives you the mindset of getting everything into your system, it soon fills with tasks that become unimportant (I had tasks “on hold” for 4 years in OF!).

If that’s what you do (above), I think that’s a novel idea. May take a bit longer to do the weekly review because you have to repast stuff, but man, that would but down on task overload.

(In fact, I may keep my list of projects in OF and cut n’ paste from OF to T3!)

Yes, I usually only keep the next action in the project. I do make an exception if I’ve committed to something on or buy a certain date, but for random next steps I think I’ll do without any defined date, I just make note of them in the notes field of the project itself or in Evernote if they’re more extensive. Another option is to just set their start date to Someday until they’re ready to be dealt with, which I do for some tasks I know I will be doing for a fact within the next few days, just not quite yet.

When I do my weekly review, I just need to check that all my projects have a next action to move the project forward. If they don’t, I add one. If they do, I make sure that next action is still relevant or change it if it needs to be changed.

Things 3 really forced me to revisit David’s natural planning model, which I didn’t pay much attention to the first couple read-throughs. Yes, GTD says to get everything out of your head, but it also says only actionable stuff should be living in your “Next Actions” list. Everything else is technically “project support” materials that are subject to change as the project changes. It took not being able to add all the details upfront like I could with Omnifocus to see just how much more complicated I was making things.

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My name is Andrea, and I love all things technology - although mainly Apple products. I'm passionate about exploring new ways to incorporate technology into my life in ways that allow me to save time, do more, and do things better without losing my connection to the world around me.

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